Stirling Review Links Top-200 Design Research to Brain Strain From High-Contrast Spaces
Updated
Updated · stir.ac.uk · Jul 9
Stirling Review Links Top-200 Design Research to Brain Strain From High-Contrast Spaces
2 articles · Updated · stir.ac.uk · Jul 9
Summary
University of Stirling researchers said a new review shows modern design choices can trigger visual discomfort and mental strain rather than ease perception.
High-contrast colours, cluttered interiors and densely packed supermarket shelves were identified as common features that can overload visual processing.
The review argues that environments designed to look striking or maximize display density may carry hidden cognitive costs for people moving through them.
Stirling framed the work within its broader sustainability research agenda; the university says it ranks in the world’s top 200 for contribution to the UN SDGs.